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February 3, 2025

Study estimates the cost of preventing extinction of Australia's priority species

The critically endangered orange-bellied parrot. Credit: Dejan Stojanovic
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The critically endangered orange-bellied parrot. Credit: Dejan Stojanovic

A new study has estimated it would cost $15.6 billion per year for 30 years to prevent extinction for 99 of Australia's priority species.

The study "The estimated cost of preventing extinction and progressing recovery for Australia's priority threatened species" has been in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The research, led by Griffith University's Center for Planetary Health and Food Security with WWF-Australia and the University of Queensland, highlights the urgent need for increased funding to combat threats such as habitat destruction, and climate change.

Australia has already lost more than 100 endemic species in the past three centuries, placing it at the forefront of the global extinction crisis.

The Australian Government has made a .

The research looked at the cost of preventing extinction for 99 of these species.

Lead author Dr. Michelle Ward said while the annual $15.6 billion could prevent the imminent extinction of many threatened species, there were some species, including many frogs, which were found to be non-recoverable, largely due to .

"Species such as Mountain-top Nursery Frog and Swan Galaxias were found to be of real concern and need active ex-situ conservation," Dr. Ward said.

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"The cost to reverse the decline of priority species and undo damage done by , disease and other threats was estimated at $103.7 billion annually, while getting them off the threatened list entirely would require $157.7 billion per year."

Dr. Romola Stewart, a co-author and WWF-Australia's Head of Evaluation and Science, said the paper highlighted the true cost of ineffective nature laws and inadequate species funding.

"Australia's ever-growing list of threatened species is a direct result of decades of under spending," she said.

"Turning this tragedy around will take a dramatic increase in action and investment.

"This is achievable for a wealthy nation like Australia.

"If we fail to put our wildlife and wild places on a path to recovery, our economy and environment will suffer, and we will see more species silently slide towards ."

The study also highlighted the broader benefits of conservation investment, including the co-benefits to 43% of all other and improved essential for human well-being.

"The natural world is undergoing profound change," Dr. Ward said.

"Biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse is ranked by the World Economic Forum as the second most significant global risk over the next decade, with 50% of the global economy dependent on nature.

"There is merit in the Australian Government's commitment, but urgent action is needed."

More information: Ward, Michelle, The estimated cost of preventing extinction and progressing recovery for Australia's priority threatened species, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). .

Journal information: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Provided by Griffith University

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Preventing the extinction of 99 of Australia's priority species would require $15.6 billion annually for 30 years. The broader cost to reverse species decline and address threats like habitat loss and climate change is estimated at $103.7 billion annually, with $157.7 billion needed to remove them from the threatened list entirely. The study emphasizes the urgent need for increased conservation funding, highlighting the broader benefits to other species and ecosystem services.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.